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Azerbaijan warns Pelosi’s remarks on conflict with Armenia blow to peace efforts

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

Pelosi on Sunday blamed Azerbaijan for starting the latest border conflict with Armenia early this week, saying Baku launched an “illegal” and “deadly” attack.

“We strongly condemn those attacks — on behalf of Congress — which threaten (the) prospects of the much-needed peace agreement,” she told a press conference in the Armenian capital, Yerevan.

On the second day of her three-day visit to Armenia, Pelosi noted Armenia is particularly important to the US.

Her provocative comments infuriated Baku, prompting the Foreign Ministry to respond with anger later in the day.

“The unsubstantiated and unfair accusations leveled by Pelosi against Azerbaijan are unacceptable,” the ministry said, adding, “Pelosi is known as a pro-Armenian politician.”

“This is a serious blow to the efforts to normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” it noted, condemning Pelosi’s remarks as “Armenian propaganda.”

The latest conflict erupted at midnight September 13, minutes after a ceasefire agreement between the two countries came into force.

Armenia accused Azerbaijan of firing in the direction of the southern Armenian towns of Goris, Kapan, and Jermuk with the help of drones. Azerbaijan rejected the claim, saying its forces were carrying out countermeasures in retaliation for “large-scale Armenian provocation.”

The new border conflict has so far claimed the lives of more than 200 people.

On Sunday, Azerbaijan repeated its position that the deadly conflict was the result of “a large-scale military provocation” by Armenia, a narrative strongly rejected by Yerevan.

“Currently, the ceasefire is being observed and the escalation of the situation has been prevented,” the statement by the Azeri Foreign Ministry read.

It also accused Pelosi of attempting to cater to Armenian-Americans ahead of the US midterm elections.

“It is unacceptable to transfer the domestic political intrigues on the US agenda and lobbying interests to the South Caucasus region through Armenia,” the Azeri ministry said, adding, “Such unilateral steps and baseless statements serve not to strengthen the fragile peace in the region, but, on the contrary, to escalate tensions.”

Shortly after the recent clashes, the Armenian Security Council asked for military help from Moscow, which is obligated under the treaty to defend Armenia in the event of foreign invasion.

Russia is currently heavily engaged in a military conflict with Ukraine.

The September 13 fighting was the most recent flare-up in tensions between the two estranged neighbors since thousands were killed in a 44-day war over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh that ended in November 2020. The deadly conflict, which claimed over 65,000 lives on both sides, ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire, but tensions continued.

After the bloody fighting, Azeri troops regained control over swathes of Nagorno-Karabakh, which had been controlled since the 1990s by ethnic Armenians.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 208

Russia Ukraine War

Germany still looking for ways to make gas affordable: Finance minister

German Finance Minister Christian Lindner said on Monday that he was still looking at ways to ensure gas prices remained affordable for people while awaiting recommendations from a group of experts.

“We have developed this commission, but proposals within the federal government are also being considered further, so it has not been completely outsourced,” Mr Lindner stated, when asked about a possible cap on gas prices.

Since the war in Ukraine began, gas prices have risen sharply in Germany, which depends heavily on Russian energy.


Bread prices jump by nearly a fifth in the EU

The price of bread rose by almost a fifth in the European Union in August as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – both major exporters of grains and fertilisers – continued to disrupt global markets.

Global wheat prices have surged since February, after the war halted grain exports from the Black Sea for months and restricted fertiliser shipments as Russian producers lost access to Baltic Sea ports they had used to ship ammonia, a key ingredient in nitrate fertiliser.

The average price of bread in the EU was 18 per cent higher in August 2022 than a year earlier, data from the bloc’s statistics office showed on Monday, the highest rise since December 2017 when Eurostat began compiling the statistic.

Bread prices have risen consistently in the EU this year, from an average of 8.3 per cent in February, when Russia launched what it calls its “special military operation”.


Baltic states and Poland close doors to Russian tourists

Four of the five European Union countries bordering Russia began turning away Russian tourists on Monday, saying they should not travel while their country is at war with Ukraine.

Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania imposed new restrictions as Finland decided to remain open, though it has cut back the number of consular appointments available to Russian travellers seeking visas.

The move was the latest in a series of sanctions and other steps taken by the EU or its member states since Moscow invaded Ukraine on February 24.

The EU has banned all flights from Russia, leaving only rail and road transport links available, and this month it agreed to limit issuing free travel Schengen zone visas.

Monday’s entry ban is aimed at tourists and excludes Russian dissidents seeking refuge in the EU along with truck drivers, refugees and permanent residents of EU countries as well as those visiting family members.


Kremlin dismisses Ukrainian war crimes claims as a ‘lie’

The Kremlin has rejected claims made by Kyiv that Russian forces committed war crimes in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region as a “lie”.

“It is the same scenario as in Bucha. It’s a lie, and of course we will defend the truth in this story,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked about Ukrainian reports of alleged Russian atrocities following the discovery of a mass grave in the recently recaptured town of Izyum.

Russia previously rejected claims that its troops had committed war crimes in Bucha, outside Kyiv, after evidence of civilians being killed while the town was controlled by Russian troops came to light when Moscow’s forces’ withdrew from there at the end of March.


Russia has ‘highly likely’ lost several combat jets in last 10 days: UK

The United Kingdom’s defence ministry says Russia has “highly likely” lost at least four combat jets in Ukraine within the last 10 days, possibly due to shifts in battlefield strategy triggered by the multi-pronged counteroffensive carried out by Kyiv’s forces.

“There is a realistic possibility that this uptick in losses is partially a result of the Russian Air Force accepting greater risk as it attempts to provide close air support to Russian ground forces under pressure from Ukrainian advances,” the ministry announced in its latest daily intelligence update.

It added the probable loss of the four combat jets had taken Russia’s total “attrition” of such units to approximately 55 since the start of its invasion in late February.

“Russia’s continued lack of air superiority remains one of the most important factors underpinning the fragility of its operational design in Ukraine,” the ministry noted.


Russia says ready for US prisoner swap talks, but scolds embassy

Russia’s foreign ministry has announced Moscow is ready for talks on a prisoner exchange to free US citizens jailed in Russia, but accused the American embassy of “not fulfilling its official duties” to maintain dialogue.

“We have stated many times that we are ready for negotiations to resolve the fate of  US citizens convicted in Russia and Russian citizens in the US,” Maria Zakharova, the ministry’s spokeswoman, said in a statement posted on Telegram.

[But] the fact is that instead of fulfilling their direct official duties – maintaining contacts with the diplomats of the host country – the US Embassy in Moscow is engaged in some kind of media madness,” she added.

Russia has previously suggested that it is open to a prisoner exchange which could include US Marine Corps veteran Paul Whelan, basketball star Brittney Griner and Viktor Bout, a Russian arms dealer jailed in Illinois.


Over 10 “torture rooms” found in reclaimed areas of northeast Ukraine: Zelensky

Troops found so-called “torture rooms” and devices used by Russian forces in reclaimed portions of the northeastern Kharkiv region, Ukraine’s President Volodymr Zelensky claimed in his nightly address Saturday.

“More than ten torture rooms have already been found in the liberated areas of Kharkiv region — in various cities and towns,” Zelensky said, adding, “As the occupiers fled, they also dropped the torture devices.”

“Even at the regular Kozacha Lopan railway station, they found a room for torture, found tools for electric torture,” he continued.

Earlier on Saturday, the Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office made similar claims.

“The Russian army tortured people in the cellar of the so-called ‘people’s militia’ in the town of Kozacha Lopan when it was under siege,” Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office stated in a social media post.

“Representatives of the Russian Federation created a pseudo-law enforcement agency, in the basement of which a torture chamber was set up, where civilians were subjected to inhuman torture,” the post continued, adding, “During the inspection, documents confirming the functioning of the pseudo-police department and the device with which the occupiers tortured civilians with electric shock were seized.”

The Kharkiv Regional Prosecutor’s Office also provided pictures of the “torture rooms” and a “device with which the occupiers tortured civilians.”

The reports from Kharkiv follow the discovery of a mass burial site in the eastern city of Izium this week. Zelensky announced Friday that some of the bodies showed “signs of torture.”


Biden: There’s been “no indication” China sent weapons or aid to Russians in Ukraine “thus far”

In a new clip of his “60 Minutes” interview, US President Joe Biden shared more details on his conversations last winter with Chinese President Xi Jinping on the “gigantic mistake” it would be if China assisted Russia in its war on Ukraine.

Biden added that “thus far” there’s been “no indication” that China has put forward weapons or “other things Russia has wanted” to aid in their war in Ukraine.

The president was about to add to his sentence when he stopped himself, saying: “Well, maybe I shouldn’t say any more.”

CBS’ Scott Pelly implored Biden to go on — but Biden answered a decisive no.

“I called President Xi. Not to threaten at all, just to say to him, we’ve met many times. And I said that, ‘if you think that Americans and others are going to continue to invest in China based on your violating the sanctions that have been imposed on Russia, I think you’re making a gigantic mistake. But that’s your decision to make,’” Biden stated, referencing a video call he had with Xi following the Beijing Olympics, which Xi invited Russian President Vladimir Putin to attend.


Zelensky says “lull” on frontline is “a preparation for liberation of more cities”

In his nightly address Sunday, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky called any perceived slowing of his military’s progress “a preparation for the liberation of more cities.”

“Perhaps it seems to someone now that after a series of victories we have a certain lull. But this is not a lull,” Zelensky said.

“This is preparation for the next sequence. For the next sequence of words that are very important to us all and that definitely must be heard,” he added.

“The words that must be heard,” Zelensky continued, are the names of liberated cities.

“Izium, Balakliya, Kupyansk and the Kharkiv region in general are the cities and communities that we have liberated. These words are heard now. They are heard everywhere,” he noted.


Ukraine says Russia stuck Pivdennoukrainsk nuclear power plant

Russian forces have struck the Pivdennoukrainsk Nuclear Power Plant (PNPP) in Ukraine’s southern Mykolaiv region, but its reactors have not been damaged and are working normally, Ukraine’s state nuclear company Energoatom says.

A blast took place 300 metres (330 yards) away from the reactors and damaged power plant buildings shortly after midnight, Energoatom said in a statement.

The reported attack, which the company described as an act of “nuclear terrorism”, also damaged a nearby hydroelectric power plant and transmission lines.

“Currently, all three power units of the PNPP are operating normally. Fortunately, there were no casualties among the station staff,” Energoatom added.

Energoatom published two photographs showing a crater it said was caused by the blast.

The PNPP is also known as the South Ukraine Nuclear Power Plant.


Ukrainian forces seize control of river near Kharkiv after Russian retreat

Ukrainian forces crossed the Oskil River in the northeastern Kharkiv region and now control both banks of the river, according the country’s military.

“The Armed Forces of Ukraine crossed the Oskil river. Since yesterday, Ukraine controls the left bank as well,” Ukraine’s Center for Strategic Communications announced on Telegram.

Earlier this month, Kirill Imashev, the military correspondent on the Russian Telegram channel Readovka, said Russian forces had left the city of Kupyansk in Kharkiv region (some 30 miles north of Izium) and retreated across the river to “regroup.”


UN: Chances of Russia-Ukraine peace deal now are ‘minimal’

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and a global food crisis aggravated by the war will be the focus of world leaders when they convene at the United Nations in New York this week.

“It would be naive to think that we are close to the possibility of a peace deal,” said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres before the high-level meeting of the 193-member UN General Assembly, which starts on Tuesday.

“The chances of a peace deal are minimal at the present moment,” he added.


Canada: Mass graves in Ukraine evidence of Russian war crimes

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said that mass graves found in Ukraine were evidence of Russia’s war crimes and that full accountability for its actions was needed.

Trudeau, in London for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, told reporters that he had met with British Prime Minister Liz Truss and that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was at the top of their agenda.

“Obviously the UK and Canada have been two of the strongest countries in standing up in support of Ukraine and pushing back against Russia’s illegal actions,” Trudeau stated.

Those actions “increasingly, clearly include war crimes, include absolutely unacceptable crimes, whether we think of what we found in Bucha or the discovery of mass graves in the reclaimed territories by Ukraine,” he added.


Top US general urges vigilance among his troops in light of Russia battle setback

The top United States general has cautioned that it was still unclear how Russia might react to the latest battlefield setbacks in Ukraine and called for vigilance among US troops as he visited a base in Poland aiding Ukraine’s war effort.

“The war is not going too well for Russia right now. So it’s incumbent upon all of us to maintain high states of readiness, alert,” US Army General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters in Warsaw following a visit to a US military base.

Milley stated he was not suggesting US troops in Europe were under any increased threat, but noted they had to be ready, Reuters reported.

“In the conduct of war,” Milley added, “you just don’t know with a high degree of certainty what will happen next.”


SA leader warns against punishing African nations over ties with Russia

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has warned against punishing African nations for maintaining ties with Russia.

The Joe Biden administration has put a new focus on Africa after being taken aback by the reluctance of some nations to condemn Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

Ramaphosa, however, warned President Biden over a piece of legislation that has passed through the US House of Representatives, which would require a strategy to counter Moscow’s role in Africa.

“I think it will harm Africa and marginalise the continent,” Ramaphosa told reporters after his meetings, adding, “We should not be told by anyone who we can associate with.”

The legislation, called the Countering Malign Russian Activities in Africa Act, has yet to clear the Senate and US policymakers stress that it does not in itself lay out any repercussions for African countries.


Australia will not ban Russian tourists from entering country: DM

Australia will not ban Russian tourists from entering the country as part of sanctions on Russia over its war in Ukraine, Defence Minister Richard Marles has said.

Since the start of the conflict, Australia has sanctioned hundreds of Russian individuals and entities, including most of Russia’s banking sector and all organisations responsible for the country’s sovereign debt.

It has also supplied defence equipment and humanitarian supplies to Ukraine, while outlawing exports of alumina and aluminium ores, including bauxite, to Russia.

Asked if Australia would also ban Russian tourists, Marles stated sanctions were aimed at Russia’s government, “not the Russian people themselves”.

“This is not something we are considering at the moment,” he told ABC television.

Meanwhile, Australia is “assessing” whether to reopen the Australian embassy in Kyiv.

It is also considering sending further military aid to Ukraine to bolster existing commitments.

“We do need to be preparing ourselves for protracted conflict and on that basis, we get that we are going to need to provide support for Ukraine over the long term,” Marles added.


Biden: ‘Ukraine is defeating Russia’

In an interview, US President Joe Biden declared victory for Ukraine meant removing Russian forces from the entire country and pledged US support for as long as it takes.

President Volodymyr Zelensky similarly echoed his sentiments in a video address on Sunday night.

“Winning the war in Ukraine is to get Russia out of Ukraine completely and to recognise the sovereignty. They’re defeating Russia,” he told CBS’s 60 Minutes broadcast on Sunday.

“Russia’s turning out not to be as competent and capable as many people thought they were going to be,” he added.

Father of dead Iranian girl says his daughter had no background medical issue

Mahsa Amini

Mahsa Amini’s father says his daughter suffered from no medical conditions be it epilepsy or anything else.

He made the comments in an interview with Tehran-based Hammihan Newspaper.

The daily also said that Mr. Amini gave some unconfirmed information about how the morality police treated his daughter while arresting her.

On Friday, Iranian Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi said Mahsa Amini suffered from a heart disease and epilepsy and that she underwent surgery at the age of 5.

Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi on Sunday talked with the family of Mahsa Amini.

Raisi told Mahsa Amini’s family that he has ordered a full probe into the incident to prevent any rights violation.

Kayhan editor in chief: Grossi is an asset of US and Israel

Rafael Grossi

Hossein Shariatmadari also described the death of Grossi’s predecessor Yukia Amano as suspicious, saying some believe that he died to pave the way for Grossi to take over as the IAEA chief.

He said Amano had said in his last report that Iran was not after nuclear weapons.

Shariatmadari also said the US does not accept a deal with Iran and will never give up imposing sanctions on the Islamic Republic.

He added that sanctions serve as a key leverage for  US to pressure world countries.

He noted that the US and the West’s dispute with Iran is not over Tehran’s nuclear technology, saying the position of the West and the US regarding their stance on Iran’s nuclear energy program is an excuse to continue enmities against Iran.

According to the Kayhan editor-in-chief, a US analyst recently said in a book that Iran has become the largest military and technological power in the region without any relationship with America while it has confronted the US for four decades.

Shariatmadari also cited the analyst as saying that the US has done all in its power against Iran but to no avail.

US house chief visits Armenia amid border clashes with Azerbaijan

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

She is the highest-ranking US official to travel to Armenia since the impoverished nation’s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

The United States Embassy announced that Pelosi’s visit will include a meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Other US legislators accompanying Pelosi include Frank Pallone, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and Congresswomen Jackie Speier and Anna Eshoo.

Pelosi on Sunday strongly condemned what she said were “illegal” border attacks by Azerbaijan on Armenia, using a visit to the Russian military ally to pledge American support for Armenian sovereignty.

Speaking in Yerevan, Pelosi stated her trip had particular importance following the “illegal and deadly attacks by Azerbaijan on Armenian territory” which led to border clashes in which more than 200 people were killed.

“We strongly condemn those attacks,” Pelosi continued, noting that “this was initiated by the Azeris and there has to be recognition of that”.

Pelosi stressed it was clear that the border fighting was triggered by Azeri assaults on Armenia and that the chronology of the conflict should be made clear.

The United States, Pelosi added, was listening to Armenia about what its defence needs were and said Washington wanted to help and support Armenia in what she cast as a global struggle between democracy and autocracy.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two wars – in 2020 and in the 1990s – over the contested Nagorno-Karabakh region, Azerbaijan’s Armenian-populated enclave.

The 2020 war killed more than 6,500 soldiers from both sides and ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire. Under that deal, Armenia ceded swaths of territory it had controlled for decades, and Moscow deployed about 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to oversee the fragile truce.

On Tuesday, the worst clashes since the 2020 conflict erupted, with Baku and Yerevan trading blame for the “intense” shelling. Armenia accused Azerbaijan of unprovoked aggression, but officials in Baku said their military was responding to Armenian attacks.

Pashinyan announced at least 135 Armenian troops were killed in the fighting, while Azerbaijan’s defence ministry reported it had lost 77. The hostilities ended on Thursday with mediation from the “international community,” according to officials in Yerevan.

Official: 5-6 nurses migrate from Iran every day

COVID in Iran

Mohammad Mirzabeigi said that figure translates to 100 to 150 nurses each month.

Mirzabeigi added that this is a worrying trend. The destination countries for these nurses range from neighboring countries such as Kazakhstan, Persian Gulf countries and Iraq’s Kurdistan region to European and North American countries.

The head of Iran’s Nursing Organization noted that most world countries welcome Iranian nurses because of their high expertise and ability.

President Raisi talks to family of young Iranian girl following her tragic death

Ebrahim Raisi

Raisi told Mahsa Amini’s family that he has ordered a full probe into the incident to prevent any rights violation.

The president said that he views all girls of Iran as his own children, adding, “In this incident, I feel like I have lost my own loved one.”

In the telephone conversation, Raisi sympathized with the family of Mahsa Amini and wished patience for them in the face of this tragedy.

The president noted that he was notified of the incident during his visit to Uzbekistan.

“I immediately ordered my colleagues to investigate the matter and I will demand relevant authorities to get to the bottom of it”, Raisi told the family of the 22-year-old girl.

Police say Amini suffered a heart attack in custody. But some deny this, saying she had no background health issue. They also claim that the girl suffered a brain hemorrhage due to a blow to her head.

The body of the young girl was laid to rest on Friday in her hometown, Saqez, in Kurdistan Province.

Amini’s death has caused uproar among many people who, mainly on the social media, blast the performance of the mortality police.

A coroner’s report is expected in three weeks over the cause of her death.

Death of young Iranian woman hitting headlines in Iran

Mahsa Amini

Here are some of the headlines of the newspapers published on Sunday morning. It should be noted that IFP just reflects what the media says and this does not mean endorsement of those views.

Aftab Yazd Newspaper:

1- IRAN IN SHOCK

. Mahsa Amini died during detention by the guidance patrol. As always, officials are pledging to pursue the issue, just as they do in similar cases, although this loss is irreparable.

Aftab Yazd


Arman Emrooz Newspaper:

1- People’s demand: Serious reconsideration of the moral security police’s conduct

2- Goodbye, the loved one

. The death of 22-year-old girl Mehsa Amini after a cardiac arrest during the briefing session of the moral security police has reopened an old wound in Iran. The wound has been a problem for years thanks to cameras of people that are always on and also due to misbehavior of some untrained police forces regarding the issue of hijab. This is a purely cultural matter but it has caused the system to pay dearly more than ever for mishandling of issues by some people with no training in psychology and in dealing with people who they think have “improper hijab” or “violate norms”.

Arman Emrooz


Arman Melli Newspaper:

1- About Mahsa

. Ulema, parties and organizations react to Mahsa Amini’s death: The death of “Gina” was painful to the bone

. Ali Najafi Tavana: Let’s safeguard civil rights

. Seyyed Hassan Mousavi Chalak: Let’s not lose our way

. Mohammad Hadi Jafarpour: Actions of guidance patrol from word to action

. Ayatollah Bayat Zanjani: None of the laws have entrusted police with guidance and education

Arman Melli


Ebtekar Newspaper:

1- Reactions to the Mahsa Amini tragedy

The death of 22-year-old Kurdish girl draws widespread reactions from people and officials.

2- Accounts of Mahsa’s death

Ebtekar


Etemad Newspaper:

1- Tragic death of Mahsa Amini

. The Human Rights Commission of the Bar Association reacts to the tragic death of Mahsa Amini.

. Interview with Hamidreza Jalaipour/Bipolarization of society due to violence by morality police

. Forming a fact-finding committee, checking the cameras, obtaining the testimonies of witnesses: Seddigheh Shakoori Rad speaks about the impact of systematic violent behavior on the occurrence of social and public disasters in the wake of the Mahsa Amini’s death.

. Hijab turns into a political issue in Iran

Etemad


Hamdeli Newspaper:

1- Deadly guidance!

. Widespread criticism of the conduct of morality police by different political parties and figures and clerics

. Mahsa’s death receives widespread global media coverage

Hamdeli


Iran Newspaper:

1- Probing tragic death of young girl

. Iran’s report on the circumstances of Mahsa Amini’s death

. Opportunists seek to exact revenge

Iran


Kayhan Newspaper:

. Footage showing moments when Mahsa Amini loses consciousness exposes liars

Kayhan


Mardomsalari Newspaper:

1- Dismantle morality police

. Death of Mahsa Amini at morality police headquarters draws widespread reaction

Mardomsalari


Resalat Newspaper:

1- Heads of branches of government pursue circumstances of Mahsa Amini’s death

Resalat


Sanat Newspaper:

1- Guidance death

. Iran mourns Mahsa Amini

Sanat


Setare Sobh Newspaper:

1- Morality police’s record stained

. Clerics, political figures and parties harshly react to death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini

. Ayatollah Bayat Zanjani: Morality police’s confrontational behavior is illegal, illogical and illegitimate

. Ayatollah Mohaghegh Damad: Promotion of good means criticism of ruling system, not sticking one’s nose into their privacy

. Seyyed Mohammad Khatami: Stop behaviors that go against the law, logic and Sharia

. Seyyed Hassan Khomeini: Police must be held accountable

. Mohammad Javad Zarif: For my part, I’m ashamed and sorry

. Stop the immorality police

Setare Sobh


Shahrvand Newspaper:

1- Puzzle of Mahsa’s death

. The body of Mehsa Amini, a 22-year-old girl from Saqez, who died on Friday at Kasra Hospital in Tehran, was laid to rest yesterday morning in Aichi Cemetery in the city. In addition to the family and relatives of Mahsa, a large number of people and a number of city officials attended her funeral.

. President Raisi orders interior minister to probe incident

Shahrvand


Shargh Newspaper:

1- Sorrow of my butterfly…! (To Gina Amini, darling of homeland): You went to get pomegranates; they brought you seeds.

. Their children, our children/a report of the sympathies of athletes

Shargh


Vatan Emrooz Newspaper:

1- Tragedy of Gina

. Mahsa Amini’s body was laid to rest yesterday morning in Aichi Cemetery of Saqez by the city’s people.

Vatan Emrooz

 

Iran Covid: 14 more deaths, 289 new infections

COVID in Iran

Some 14 more Iranians have died from the coronavirus over the past 24 hours bringing the total deaths to 144,301, Iran’s Health Ministry said on Sunday.

289 new cases of infection with COVID-19 were found over the past 24 hours, 74 of whom were hospitalized, it added.

The health ministry noted that 7,320,941 patients out of a total of 7,542,822 infected people have recovered or been discharged from hospitals.

277 COVID-19 patients are in critical conditions and in intensive care units, it added.

The Iranian Health Ministry also announced that 65,061,152 Iranians have received the first dose and 58,455,608 people have so far received the second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Moreover, 31,126,000 people have also received the third or fourth shots as the booster jab.

“No report of physical assault on Mahsa Amini in detention”

Mahsa Amini

Vahidi says the ministry has been “sensitive” about the issue to know whether the victim was assaulted and is waiting for the final opinion of legal medicine experts on the cause of her death.

He added that investigations also show a physicist had immediately attended the victim at Ershad judicial complex and she was taken to the closest hospital, where she received routine medical care.

The minister also said investigations are underway into whether there has been a “mistake”, or any illegal process, that led to the death of the 22-year-old.
He said a final announcement on the issue will be made after the investigations are concluded.

Amini fell into a coma while in custody in Tehran after being arrested by officers enforcing Hijab rules, known as “morality police,” on charge of failure to properly observe the mandatory Islamic dress code.

She later died in Kasra hospital with her death triggering a social media storm and massive outcry.

Authorities have released footage that shows the woman fall and faint when speaking with a female personnel member at Ershad judicial complex.
Police say Amini had a heart attack and collapsed.

But this is disputed by her family and many others in public, who say the young woman was mistreated while in custody.